Puppet MastersS


Bell

Clinton & DNC accused of fraud, finance violations in election commission complaint

Hilary DNC Complaint
© Brian Snyder/Reuters
A complaint has been filed with the Federal Election Commission over the alleged violation of campaign finance laws by Hillary Clinton's campaign and the Democratic National Committee.

The complaint comes as undercover videos from the conservative Project Veritas allegedly show both the campaign and the DNC involved in ripping up voter registrations and unethical campaigning.

According to the complaint, it's based on "findings from an investigation conducted by Project Veritas Action and their published reports regarding the same, as well as on news sources."

Ambulance

'Bad hombres,' Assad & huge debt: Final Trump-Clinton debate's top moments

David Becker/Reuters Trump Hilary Debate
© David Becker/Reuters

From Russia's alleged hacking and cooperation with Trump, to WikiLeaks and Assad, Wednesday night's debate was full of zingers. Here are eight of the top moments between the two outspoken candidates, whose loathing for each other shone through.

'Such a nasty woman'

While Clinton was discussing her tax plan, she said: "My social security contribution payroll will go up, as will Donald's, assuming he can't figure out how to get out of it."

"Such a nasty woman," Trump responded.

Given that Trump has previously said that no one has more respect for women than himself, the internet then responded accordingly, by losing its collective mind.

Che Guevara

From 'mad dog' to 'model' and back: How West changed its mind on Libya's Gaddafi

Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi is seen inside a storage freezer in Misrata
© Saad Shalash / ReutersThe body of slain Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi is seen inside a storage freezer in Misrata
In the 42 years that Colonel Muammar Gaddafi ruled Libya, Western views went from considering him a cartoon villain to believing him a model of international conduct - and back to villain again, when the West backed an armed rebellion against him.

The Libyan Army officer who led the 1969 coup against King Idris I quickly became a thorn in the side of Western powers, nationalizing British Petroleum's holdings and withdrawing Libyan millions from British banks by 1971. Libya also led OPEC's oil boycott of the US in 1973, and Gaddafi became an outspoken advocate of the Palestinian cause.


Comment: The interesting point about Gaddafi is that he never rose in rank. Forever a Colonel, at least one can say he didn't do it for ambition. He could have called himself anything, or made the people call him anything. He could have been a gazillion star general. Maybe he was mad. Maybe he was wrong. Maybe he was a dictator. At least he wasn't a pompous dictator.


Black Magic

Gaddafi's murder 5 years later: Libya drenched in blood, no sign of liberty tree

Britain's Prime Minister Tony Blair (L) shakes hands with Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi
© Leon Neal / ReutersBritain's Prime Minister Tony Blair (L) shakes hands with Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi near Gaddafi's home town of Sirte May 29, 2007
Five years ago, strongman Muammar Gaddafi, who had balanced Libyan factions to preserve stability, was hunted down and brutally killed by NATO-backed rebels, but ousting him has resulted in chaos and perpetual bloodshed rather than freedom and prosperity.

These days are busy for Libya. In the capital, Tripoli, a militant faction defied the UN-supported Government of National Unity (GNA) last Friday by declaring its own government. They have since seized a parliamentary building and exchanged sporadic gunfire with loyalist forces.


The GNA has no proper army of its own, so Tripoli is a patchwork of rival armed groups. Some back government officials, while others are linked to Islamist groups or militias in other cities. The situation is a reflection of Libya in general, where local warlords and tribal militias determine the daily lives of people with little regard to any central authority.

Vader

Flashback US sabotage of Venezuela a Killary priority

clinton chaves Venezuela
© EFEHillary Clinton with former Venezuelan President, Hugo Chavez
As secretary of state, Hillary Clinton led a team committed to delegitimizing the politics of the late Hugo Chavez and the Bolivarian Revolution.

While Hillary Clinton publicly welcomed improved relations with Venezuela as secretary of state, she privately ridiculed the country and continued to support destabilization efforts, revealed her emails leaked by WikiLeaks.

In 2010, Clinton asked Arturo Valenzuela, then assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere Affairs, how "to rein in Chavez." Valenzuela responded that, "We need to carefully consider the consequences of publicly confronting him but ought to look at opportunities for others in the region to help."

His answer was in line with the U.S. embassy strategy in 2006, also revealed in WikiLeaks intelligence cables: "Creative U.S. outreach to Chavez' regional partners will drive a wedge between him and them," said the confidential cable from the embassy. "By refusing to take each of Chavez's outbursts seriously, we frustrate him even more, paving the way for additional Bolivarian miscalculations. We also allow room for other international actors to respond."

Comment: No country has been safe from this woman.


Bad Guys

US/NATO backed Al-Nusra opens fire on civilians leaving Aleppo, shells humanitarian corridor

Al-Nusra Front  militants
© AFP 2016/ RAMI AL-SAYEDAl Qaeda-affiliated groups in Syria 'crippled' by Trump's election victory
Translated by J. Arnoldski

Militants from the Jebat Al-Nusra terrorist group opened fire on a crowd of civilians gathering at the entrance of the humanitarian corridor in the Bustan al-Qasr district of Aleppo. This has been reported to RIA Novosti by Syrian militias.

On October 20th at 8:00, a humanitarian pause entered into force. Since Tuesday, Russian and Syrian air forces have ceased strikes, and before the beginning of the humanitarian pause Syrian troops moved back a distance to allow militants and residents to leave the eastern districts of Aleppo through two specific corridors.


Comment: See also: The militants also attacked Syrian army positions on the Castello road with small arms and heavy machine guns several minutes before today's pause ended.

Despite their distinctly un-humanitarian behavior, the Nusrats continue to have the Americans' support. The State Department says they are not "a priority", and have attacked them only once or twice.

Russia has extended the pause for another 24 hours, making for 4 11-hour pauses. UN advisor Jan Egeland says "Armed opposition groups say they will enable this to happen." He also says the UN expects to carry out medical evacuations soon: "We believe we now have all of the green lights that we need both from the Russians and the government and from the armed opposition inside and we hope that the first medical evacuations can take place tomorrow."

Already, in the first day militants killed 14 local Syrian officials (they were publicly executed by Ahrar al-Sham for calling on locals to leave the city via the corridors) and wounded three Russian officers managing the pause. Eight wounded militants used the corridor and received food, first aid, and transport to a rebel-held area. One report says 150 Ahrar al-Shame militants have made an agreement with the army to leave.

However, it doesn't look like Nusra is allowing civilians to leave. A RIA Novosti correspondent says that despite the lack of fighting, "Buses and ambulances are still waiting for evacuees, ready to bring them to safety." One of Aleppo's residents told RIA Novosti by phone: "People want to leave, we are tired of war. Hundreds of people have gathered in Hananu to demand that militants let us go," the resident said, adding a clashes between al-Nusra [Front] fighters and several militias broke out earlier today in the neighboring Bustan al-Qasr district.

Syrian lawmaker Jamal Rabia:
Russia has put forth many efforts to find a peaceful resolution to the Syrian conflict. But now it's obvious that the US and its allies are not interested in such a scenario. The current ceasefire will be the last possibility for militants to leave the city. The following cleansing of the city is a military solution, but it will pave the way for talks to resolve the conflict.
Update: Here's how the Russian Reconciliation Center summed up the first day:
All humanitarian corridors were targeted permanently. Three officers of the Russian Centre for reconciliation of opposing sides have been slightly injured by insurgents' firing against the southern corridor near Suk al-Hai market. The officers have been delivered to the Hmeymim airbase. Their lives are no longer threatened.







Caesar

President Duterte: Barack Obama and U.S. 'has lost,' Philippines aligns with China (VIDEO)

Duterte

Comment: All inflammatory rhetoric and Western-skewed sound bites aside, President Duterte is, as you'll see in the videos below, a highly intelligent, articulate, courageous and principled man who is seeking nothing less than to remove his country from under the disastrous yoke of US imperialism and crime.


As the Obama era slugs to an end, most eyes are on the Middle East, a flashpoint of Barack Obama's many geopolitical failures.

Beyond the Middle East, Barack Obama whom upon taking office spoke of a 'pivot' to Asia, finds that his Asia policy is in tatters.

China openly mocks him, Japan looks to diversify her regional and global allies and most importantly, The Philippines, a former US colony and since the end of the Second World War, a colony in all but name, is going it alone and doing so with the aid of China. To put it in terms that will someday fill American history books, Obama is the man who lost the Philippines.

Since 1591, what is now the Republic of The Philippines was a Spanish colony. Spain's long decline as a maritime empire was deeply shaken during the Spanish-American War of 1898. The war was short and decisive in America's favor and was America's first taste at global rather than continental colonialism. In addition to receiving Cuba from Spain, America also took possession of the Philippines.

During the war with Spain, independence-minded Filipino republicans were made promises of freedom by Washington. This of course did not pan out and a bloody war ensued between the American military and Filipino republicans.

Comment: See: Will the Empire really try to kill Philippines president Duterte?


Jet2

Syrian Army threatens to shoot down any Turkish aircraft after airstrike kills 150 civilians in northern Syria

turkish f-16
© AP Photo/ Anatolia, Kenan Gurbuz
The Syrian army said on Thursday that it will shoot down any Turkish warplanes violating the Syrian airspace in response to recent Turkish airstrikes on Kurdish villages in northern Syria that allegedly killed 150 civilians.

"The Syrian army warns that it is ready to shoot down Turkish warplanes by any means available if they attempt to once again violate the Syrian airspace," the army general command said in a statement.

According to the statement, the Turkish authorities are responsible for the deaths of some 150 civilians in Turkish airstrikes on the villages of Hassajek, Vardia and Hasia on Wednesday night.

Comment: See also: Russian MoD slams Belgian and US-coalition airstrikes on weddings, funerals, hospitals


Mr. Potato

Ravings of a Mad Person: Killary's Exceptionally Delusional Time Editorial

clinton
Evil woman.
There's always been something special about the United States of America. President Abraham Lincoln called us the "last, best hope of earth." President Ronald Reagan said we are a "shining city on a hill." And Robert Kennedy called us a great, unselfish, compassionate country.

I couldn't agree more.


Comment: Newsflash, Killary. Lincoln and Kennedy were talking about a different country. Certainly not the America that exists today. Kennedy was the Obi Wan Kenobi of Lincoln's "best hope". America today is the Empire. The same Empire that killed him and his brother. The same Empire you represent.


If there's one core belief that has guided and inspired me every step of my career in public service, it's this: the U.S. is an exceptional nation. And when you add up all our advantages, it's clear we're indispensable too—a nation all others look to for leadership.


Comment: Exceptional in its capacity for plunder and murder. Indispensable for an oligarchic class that will hold on to power at all costs. No, countries do not look on the U.S. for leadership. Leadership is either imposed in the form of coercive control, or utter destruction. And that isn't leadership at all.


America is indispensable in part because we have the greatest military in history, with the best troops, training and technology. And it's essential we do everything we can to support our men and women in uniform, and our veterans.


Comment: You have that right. Might makes right for the American Empire. The best way to enforce it is to be exceptionally militaristic and exceptionally brutal.


Boat

Mediterranean Sea: Russian air carrier group's tour provokes hysteria in Europe, military concern

russian aircraft carrier
© Oleg Lastochkin / SputnikAdmiral Kuznetsov aircraft carrier
A cruise of the Russian Northern Fleet's naval group, including Russia's only aircraft carrier, to the Mediterranean Sea has provoked a nervous response from some European states, who said they could send their vessels to intercept the group.

The Netherlands said that it is ready to send HNLMS Evertsen, a guided-missile frigate of the Dutch Royal Navy, to intercept the Russian air carrier group. The frigate will escort the group as it passes through the Northern Sea, Rob Verkerk, the Dutch Royal Navy Commander, said in his Twitter post. Verkerk later added that the Admiral Benelux, the Commanding Officer of the combined military staff of the Royal Netherlands Navy and the Naval Component of the Belgian Armed Forces, will also send Belgian frigate, Leopold I, to join the escort mission.

The Russian naval group headed by Admiral Kuznetsov, Russia's only aircraft carrier, left the port of Severomorsk at 3:00 p.m. Moscow time (12 noon GMT) on October 15 for the eastern Mediterranean. It also includes the battle cruiser Peter the Great, the anti-submarine vessel Severomorsk, and five other vessels of Russia's Northern Fleet.

Comment: One aircraft carrier and half of Europe is paranoid.